What lies behind America’s historic romance with the gun? Why does it have such a troubled relationship with alcohol and drugs? Why is it so wedded to consumerism and so resistant to the evidence of climate change? What are its enduring myths about individuality freedom and independence and how might we re-imagine our vision of the United States as the “Promised Land” and “The City on the Hill” to reflect a multiculturalism that offers “the last best hope” for the world? In a two-decades long journey through the American psyche depth journalist Pythia Peay has asked these and many more questions of no fewer than thirty-six of the world’s leading psychologists and psychoanalysts. From Robert Jay Lifton to Marion Woodman A. Thomas McLellan to Judith V. Jordan Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi to June Singer and James Hillman to Mary Pipher the thinkers in America on the Couch discuss violence addiction the environment capitalism and consumerism politics and power and the soul of America. The result is a uniquely comprehensive wide-ranging and compelling kaleidoscope of insights into the psychodynamics of a hegemon in peace and at war as it confronts the shadows of the American century and charts its way into an uncertain multi-polar future. Featuring: Stephen Aizenstat John Beebe Bonnie Bright Gary S. Bobroff Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi Philip Cushman Larry Decker Raymond De Young Edward Edinger Michael Eigen Stephen J. Foster Charles Grob Bud Harris A. Chris Heath James Hillman Judith V. Jordan Donald Kalsched Robert J. Langs Linda Schierse Leonard Harriet Lerner Robert Jay Lifton A. Thomas McLellan Thomas Moore Ginette Paris Mary Pipher Ernest Rossi Andrew Samuels Erel Shalit June Singer Thomas Singer Lawrence Staples Murray Stein Charles B. Strozier Paul Wachtel Karen B. Walant Marion Woodman Luigi Zoja